#57 – Tom Kalil on how to do the most good in government

#57 – Tom Kalil on how to do the most good in government

You’re 29 years old, and you’ve just been given a job in the White House. How do you quickly figure out how the US Executive Branch behemoth actually works, so that you can have as much impact as possible - before you quit or get kicked out?

That was the challenge put in front of Tom Kalil in 1993.

He had enough success to last a full 16 years inside the Clinton and Obama administrations, working to foster the development of the internet, then nanotechnology, and then cutting-edge brain modelling, among other things.

But not everyone figures out how to move the needle. In today's interview, Tom shares his experience with how to increase your chances of getting an influential role in government, and how to make the most of the opportunity if you get in.

Links to learn more, summary and full transcript.

Interested in US AI policy careers? Apply for one-on-one career advice here.

Vacancies at the Center for Security and Emerging Technology.

Our high-impact job board, which features other related opportunities.

He believes that Congressional gridlock leads people to greatly underestimate how much the Executive Branch can and does do on its own every day. Decisions by individuals change how billions of dollars are spent; regulations are enforced, and then suddenly they aren't; and a single sentence in the State of the Union can get civil servants to pay attention to a topic that would otherwise go ignored.

Over years at the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy, 'Team Kalil' built up a white board of principles. For example, 'the schedule is your friend': setting a meeting date with the President can force people to finish something, where they otherwise might procrastinate.

Or 'talk to who owns the paper'. People would wonder how Tom could get so many lines into the President's speeches. The answer was "figure out who's writing the speech, find them with the document, and tell them to add the line." Obvious, but not something most were doing.

Not everything is a precise operation though. Tom also tells us the story of NetDay, a project that was put together at the last minute because the President incorrectly believed it was already organised – and decided he was going to announce it in person.

In today's episode we get down to nuts & bolts, and discuss:
• How did Tom spin work on a primary campaign into a job in the next White House?
• Why does Tom think hiring is the most important work he did, and how did he decide who to bring onto the team?
• How do you get people to do things when you don't have formal power over them?
• What roles in the US government are most likely to help with the long-term future, or reducing existential risks?
• Is it possible, or even desirable, to get the general public interested in abstract, long-term policy ideas?
• What are 'policy entrepreneurs' and why do they matter?
• What is the role for prizes in promoting science and technology? What are other promising policy ideas?
• Why you can get more done by not taking credit.
• What can the White House do if an agency isn't doing what it wants?
• How can the effective altruism community improve the maturity of our policy recommendations?
• How much can talented individuals accomplish during a short-term stay in government?

Get this episode by subscribing to our podcast on the world’s most pressing problems and how to solve them: type '80,000 Hours' into your podcasting app.

The 80,000 Hours Podcast is produced by Keiran Harris.

Jaksot(320)

#197 – Nick Joseph on whether Anthropic's AI safety policy is up to the task

#197 – Nick Joseph on whether Anthropic's AI safety policy is up to the task

The three biggest AI companies — Anthropic, OpenAI, and DeepMind — have now all released policies designed to make their AI models less likely to go rogue or cause catastrophic damage as they approach...

22 Elo 20242h 29min

#196 – Jonathan Birch on the edge cases of sentience and why they matter

#196 – Jonathan Birch on the edge cases of sentience and why they matter

"In the 1980s, it was still apparently common to perform surgery on newborn babies without anaesthetic on both sides of the Atlantic. This led to appalling cases, and to public outcry, and to campaign...

15 Elo 20242h 1min

#195 – Sella Nevo on who's trying to steal frontier AI models, and what they could do with them

#195 – Sella Nevo on who's trying to steal frontier AI models, and what they could do with them

"Computational systems have literally millions of physical and conceptual components, and around 98% of them are embedded into your infrastructure without you ever having heard of them. And an inordin...

1 Elo 20242h 8min

#194 – Vitalik Buterin on defensive acceleration and how to regulate AI when you fear government

#194 – Vitalik Buterin on defensive acceleration and how to regulate AI when you fear government

"If you’re a power that is an island and that goes by sea, then you’re more likely to do things like valuing freedom, being democratic, being pro-foreigner, being open-minded, being interested in trad...

26 Heinä 20243h 4min

#193 – Sihao Huang on navigating the geopolitics of US–China AI competition

#193 – Sihao Huang on navigating the geopolitics of US–China AI competition

"You don’t necessarily need world-leading compute to create highly risky AI systems. The biggest biological design tools right now, like AlphaFold’s, are orders of magnitude smaller in terms of comput...

18 Heinä 20242h 23min

#192 – Annie Jacobsen on what would happen if North Korea launched a nuclear weapon at the US

#192 – Annie Jacobsen on what would happen if North Korea launched a nuclear weapon at the US

"Ring one: total annihilation; no cellular life remains. Ring two, another three-mile diameter out: everything is ablaze. Ring three, another three or five miles out on every side: third-degree burns ...

12 Heinä 20241h 54min

#191 (Part 2) – Carl Shulman on government and society after AGI

#191 (Part 2) – Carl Shulman on government and society after AGI

This is the second part of our marathon interview with Carl Shulman. The first episode is on the economy and national security after AGI. You can listen to them in either order!If we develop artificia...

5 Heinä 20242h 20min

#191 (Part 1) – Carl Shulman on the economy and national security after AGI

#191 (Part 1) – Carl Shulman on the economy and national security after AGI

This is the first part of our marathon interview with Carl Shulman. The second episode is on government and society after AGI. You can listen to them in either order!The human brain does what it does ...

27 Kesä 20244h 14min

Suosittua kategoriassa Koulutus

rss-murhan-anatomia
psykopodiaa-podcast
rss-narsisti
voi-hyvin-meditaatiot-2
aamukahvilla
rss-vapaudu-voimaasi
psykologia
rss-liian-kuuma-peruna
dear-ladies
leveli
adhd-podi
kesken
rss-duodecim-lehti
aloita-meditaatio
ihminen-tavattavissa-tommy-hellsten-instituutti
rss-koira-haudattuna
rahapuhetta
ilona-rauhala
rss-niinku-asia-on
rss-luonnollinen-synnytys-podcast